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301 Censorship, cancel culture, and the First Amendment — why local publishers can’t afford to look away

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Release Date: 09/19/2025

330 Inside the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette turnaround: What its new owners plan next show art 330 Inside the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette turnaround: What its new owners plan next

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

In this episode of E&P Reports, we examine one of the most consequential local news stories in the country — the near-collapse and sudden reinvention of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — through separate interviews with two key voices: Andrew Conte, a leading local news advocate and managing director of the , and Bob Cohn, president and CEO of The Baltimore Banner and The the organization now stepping in to lead the paper’s future. Access more at this episode’s landing page, at:  

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329 Why local media advertising got harder to sell show art 329 Why local media advertising got harder to sell

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

For decades, local media relied on a simple formula: build audience, and advertisers would follow. Now, Gordon Borrell notes, that formula has quietly failed as the local business landscape and marketing decision-makers have shifted. Service businesses, in-house marketers, and AI-driven tools increasingly control ad spending. Borrell warns traditional media must rethink their sales approach to stay relevant with today’s advertisers. Access more at this episode’s landing page, at:  

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328 Commitment over capacity: Why investigative journalism persists despite shrinking newsrooms show art 328 Commitment over capacity: Why investigative journalism persists despite shrinking newsrooms

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Investigative journalism has never been easy. But according to the latest State of Accountability Journalism report from the University of Florida’s Collier Prize, the reporters doing that work today say the obstacles are growing even as their commitment to watchdog reporting remains strong. Shrinking newsroom staffs, rising costs for public records and increasing resistance from government agencies are making investigations harder to pursue. Yet many journalists say the very pressures threatening accountability reporting are also reinforcing why it matters. As Collier Prize director Rick...

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327 Rebuilding the statehouse beat: Inside The Center Square’s growing newswire model show art 327 Rebuilding the statehouse beat: Inside The Center Square’s growing newswire model

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Rebuilding the statehouse beat: Inside The Center Square’s growing newswire model The decline of traditional newsroom staffing has thinned one of journalism’s most important beats: statehouse reporting. As fewer reporters cover legislative chambers and the policy decisions shaping taxpayers’ lives, new models have emerged to fill the gap. Among the fastest-growing is The Center Square, a nonprofit newswire focused on government accountability reporting that publisher Chris Krug says was built to address what he sees as a structural hole in the American news ecosystem. Access more at this...

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326 Stars and Stripes defends its independence amid new Pentagon pressures show art 326 Stars and Stripes defends its independence amid new Pentagon pressures

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

For generations of service members, Stars and Stripes has been known as the soldiers’ newspaper, funded by the U.S. government but protected by law to report independently on the military it covers. Now that independence is facing renewed scrutiny. Signals from the Pentagon about refocusing the paper’s coverage and internal policy shifts have raised concerns among journalists and press freedom advocates that the Defense Department may be seeking to reshape the mission of one of the world’s most unusual news organizations. Access more at this episode’s landing page, at:...

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325 How Australia forced Big Tech to pay for journalism — and what publishers everywhere can learn show art 325 How Australia forced Big Tech to pay for journalism — and what publishers everywhere can learn

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

The Australian Financial Review once called Rod Sims “the most feared man in Australian business.” Big Tech soon learned why. As chair of Australia’s competition regulator, Sims helped design the groundbreaking News Media Bargaining Code that forced platforms like Google and Facebook to negotiate payments with publishers. In this conversation with E&P, Sims explores how the policy now sends roughly $250 million a year back to news organizations and what publishers around the world can learn from Australia’s fight to make Big Tech pay for journalism. Access more at this episode’s...

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324 New LMC report finds digital revenue stable as audience revenue pressures grow show art 324 New LMC report finds digital revenue stable as audience revenue pressures grow

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

A new industry survey from the Local Media Consortium (LMC) suggests that while digital revenue across local media remains relatively stable, the path forward is becoming more complicated. One of the most striking findings: the number of publishers identifying audience revenue as a major challenge has surged dramatically year over year. Fran Wills, CEO of the LMC, says the shift doesn’t necessarily signal collapse — but it does reflect a new phase of pressure on subscription growth and sustainability. In a conversation with E&P, Wills breaks down what the data reveals about the...

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323 A blueprint beyond media: How Hearst is redefining sustainability show art 323 A blueprint beyond media: How Hearst is redefining sustainability

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

For decades, media leaders have debated whether journalism can sustain itself as a standalone business. But in a rapidly evolving landscape, is offering a different perspective — one outlined in its latest , which makes clear the company’s center of gravity has shifted far beyond traditional media. In a recent conversation on E&P Reports, David Carey, senior vice president of public affairs and communications at Hearst, expanded on that strategy, explaining how the company’s transformation wasn’t reactive, but decades in the making. His insights reveal a model that doesn’t...

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322 When journalists can’t afford rent, one newsroom buys them a home show art 322 When journalists can’t afford rent, one newsroom buys them a home

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

When a newsroom can’t hire reporters, the problem isn’t always pay — sometimes it’s rent. In one coastal community, the cost of living got so high that journalists simply couldn’t afford to cover the news. So instead of raising salaries or cutting coverage, the solution took an unexpected turn: they bought a condo. It’s a bold move that may point to a new model for keeping local journalism alive. Access more at this episode’s landing page, at:  

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321 Unpacking the local news playbook: What sustainable publishers are doing differently show art 321 Unpacking the local news playbook: What sustainable publishers are doing differently

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Local journalism isn’t disappearing — it’s being rebuilt in real time, and a new report from FT Strategies aims to show exactly how. Drawing on global data, newsroom case studies and on-the-ground experience, the Local News Playbook shifts the conversation from crisis to what’s actually working. Instead of asking how to save journalism, the report examines what the most resilient organizations already have in common — and how others can follow. In a conversation with E&P, George Adelman, director and head of partnerships at FT Strategies, unpacks the patterns, priorities and...

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When billion-dollar networks like CBS and ABC cave to political pressure and late-night stars like Colbert and Kimmel get muzzled, what chance does a small-town publisher have? If Washington can bend the most prominent players in media, local newspapers — already stretched thin by lawsuits, advertiser boycotts, and the rise of AI — are staring down an even harsher storm. That’s why Bob Corn-Revere, one of America’s top First Amendment lawyers, warns now is the moment to stiffen spines. “A spine is a terrible thing to waste,” he said — and for publishers, wasting it could mean losing the last line of defense for democracy.

Access more at this episode’s landing page, at:

https://www.editorandpublisher.com/stories/networks-under-fire-and-what-it-means-for-local-publishers,257824